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Alcázar of Toledo, Spain
Alcázar of Toledo

Castilla-La Mancha

Alcázar of Toledo

How to visit the Alcázar of Toledo: it's the Army Museum now, what €5 actually buys you, and whether the climb up to it is worth your time on a short Toledo trip.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Where

Toledo, Spain

Opening hours

Tuesday to Sunday, 10:00–17:00 (last entry roughly 30 minutes before close). Closed every Monday, plus 1 and 6 January, 1 May, and 24, 25 and 31 December. Confirm your date on ejercito.defensa.gob.es/museo.

Tickets

General admission €5 (about £4.30). Free every Wednesday and on a handful of commemorative dates. Free for under-18s, EU over-65s, and disabled visitors with a companion.

Time needed

1.5–2 hours for the museum if Civil War and military history interest you; 30–40 minutes if you're mainly there for the building and the views.

In short

Visiting Alcázar of Toledo

The Alcázar is the square hilltop fortress that dominates every Toledo skyline photo — and inside it is now the Museo del Ejército (Army Museum), not a palace tour. Admission is a flat €5 (about £4.30), it's free every Wednesday, and you don't need to book ahead because it rarely sells out. Allow 1.5–2 hours if military and Spanish Civil War history interests you, or skip the interior entirely and just walk up for the rooftop-level views if it doesn't.

How to visit, and what’s actually inside

The Alcázar is the boxy four-towered fortress on the highest point of Toledo — the one in every postcard of the city from across the Tagus. The thing most people don’t realise until they’re at the door: it isn’t a furnished royal palace you tour. Since 2010 the interior has housed the Museo del Ejército (Spain’s national Army Museum), so a ticket buys you a large, methodical military-history collection running from medieval armour through to the 20th century, plus a preserved basement section on the 1936 Civil War siege that left much of the original building in ruins.

You don’t need to book ahead. Admission is a flat €5 (about £4.30) bought at the door, it’s free every Wednesday, and it almost never sells out the way the cathedral does. The one thing to get right is the calendar: it’s open Tuesday to Sunday, 10:00–17:00, and closed every Monday — turning up on a Monday is the classic Toledo mistake. Last entry is around half an hour before closing. Under-18s, EU over-65s, and disabled visitors with a companion go in free.

Timing your visit, and is it worth it?

Be honest with yourself about the museum. If Spanish military history and the Civil War genuinely interest you, allow an hour and a half to two hours — it’s well laid out and the siege rooms are genuinely affecting. If they don’t, you can do the core of it in 30–40 minutes, or skip the interior entirely: the walk up to the Alcázar is free, and the streets and terraces around it give you the hilltop views and the sheer scale of the fortress without paying anything.

Our verdict: the Alcázar is unmissable as a silhouette and worth the climb for its own sake, but the museum inside is a specialist pick rather than a Toledo essential. On a tight day trip from Madrid we’d put the cathedral and a wander through the old Jewish quarter ahead of it, and treat the Army Museum as the thing to do if you’ve got a full day or a real interest in the history. If you’re here on a Wednesday, though, going in costs nothing — so you may as well.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Toledo city guide.

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Alcázar of Toledo FAQs

Do you need to book Alcázar of Toledo tickets in advance?
No. Unlike Toledo's cathedral, the Army Museum inside the Alcázar rarely sells out, and €5 tickets are bought at the door. The only reason to plan is the day of the week: it's closed Mondays and free every Wednesday.
Is the Alcázar of Toledo worth it?
It depends what you want. The building itself and the views from its hilltop are worth the walk up for free. The interior is the Museo del Ejército — a serious military-history museum heavy on the 1936 Civil War siege — which is excellent if that's your thing and skippable if it isn't.
What's actually inside the Alcázar now?
The Museo del Ejército (Spain's national Army Museum), covering military history from medieval armour to the 20th century, plus a preserved section explaining the brutal 1936 siege of the Alcázar. It is not a furnished royal palace.

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